

Let’s leave Elsa for a moment and go back a bit, to a white-haired (and moustached) man who’s sobbing on his front porch in the middle of nowhere. In her voiceover, she wonders if she’s become a demon, too. But an arrow through the torso doesn’t stop her, and a furious Elsa lurches around the field, shooting at the men on horseback. Given that her prospects (getting sold) aren’t great if she does what he says, she shoots him… at the exact moment he shoots her. Elsa runs to the fallen body of a man and digs for his gun, but she’s brought up short when a Native American man on horseback threatens to take her down if she doesn’t drop the weapon. And yet, I’ve seen it and understand it even less than before I first cast eyes on this place.” She’s crying things in her immediate vicinity are definitely not OK as she says that she’s in Hell, “and there are demons everywhere.”Īs she gets to her feet, we see that a nearby covered wagon is on fire, and people who appear to be Native Americans are shooting arrows into a group of white people as they flee. She narrates that she’s in the American Great Plains, a place that “must be witnessed to be understood. When we meet Elsa, she appears to be coming back to consciousness after getting knocked out. 1883, the Yellowstone prequel that premiered Sunday on Paramount+, is that Dutton’s story.Īs we kick off the Episode 1 recap, though, it seems like 1883 might actually be the story of Elsa Dutton (played by Alexa & Katie‘s Isabel May), James’ teenage daughter, whose voiceover starts and ends the episode.

Long before John Dutton ever presided over Yellowstone‘s titular ranch, his ancestor James Dutton risked everything to settle his family in the wilds of the American west. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Lands Premiere Date, Early Season 2 Renewal

Star Trek: Discovery Renewed For Season 5 - Plus, Picard Season 2 Premiere Date Is Set
